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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1HT0_fort-dodge-camp-supply-military-road_Minneola-KS.html
The Fort Dodge - Camp Supply Military Road passed several hundred feet west of this marker. The route was established in 1868 during General Phillip H. Sheridan's winter campaign against Indians in Texas and the Indian Territory. This ungraded pra…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18OV_campsite-of-the-u-s-survey-team-sept-10-21-1825_Dodge-City-KS.html
Camping near this location Sept. 10, 1825, the survey team remained through September 21 waiting for a courier with information from the U.S. Government as to how to proceed further. West of the 100th meridian which surveyor Joseph Brown mistaking…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18JU_santa-fe-trail-sites-to-the-east_Dodge-City-KS.html
Unlike the emigrant trails that took travelers west to Utah, Oregon, and California, the Santa Fe Trail mainly handled commercial traffic moving east and west.
When Santa Fe became part of the United States in 1848 after the Mexican-American Wa…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18JN_santa-fe-trail-1821-1880_Dodge-City-KS.html
Eighteen Miles a DayHundreds of freight wagons laden with trade items once lumbered by here, passing just uphill from where you are standing. Large caravans took six to ten weeks to travel the 900 miles between Mexico (present-day New Mexico) and …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18JJ_a-fine-country_Dodge-City-KS.html
"Long ago the Arapahoes had a fine country of their own. The white man came to see them, and the Indians gave him buffalo meat and a horse to ride on...the country was big enough for the white man and the Arapahoes, too...The government sent agent…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18J7_santa-fe-trail-sites-to-the-west-south_Dodge-City-KS.html
Pioneered by William Becknell in 1821, the Santa Fe Trail was a 900-mile overland road that connected Franklin, Missouri, with Santa Fe, New Mexico, and was an important commercial trade route. Near here, trail travelers had to decide which route …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18J6_trails-on-the-prairie_Dodge-City-KS.html
You are standing on a bluff above the Arkansas River, an international boundary between the United States and Mexico during the early years of the Santa Fe Trail. This area was prone to flooding and the ruts offer an excellent illustration of how …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18J5_santa-fe-trail-remains_Dodge-City-KS.html
has been designated aRegistered NationalHistoric Landmarkunder the provisions of theHistoric Sites Act of August 21, 1935This site possesses exceptional valuein commemorating or illustratingthe history of the United States
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18J4_soules-ditch_Dodge-City-KS.html
Local men, boys, and animals sweated long and hard to build the Eureka Irrigation Canal between 1884 and 1887. The long line below the ridge is a remnant of this early effort to irrigate semi-arid lands using the only reliable water source then av…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM18HT_the-worst-piece-of-road_Dodge-City-KS.html
For 60 years, this prairie soil was torn by the hooves of mules, oxen, and horses, and compacted by the weight of the large freight wagons they pulled. The wagons of a caravan traveled four abreast to avoid dust and to quickly form defensive circl…